How to Render Tallow

As someone that has rendered quite a bit of lard over the years I was curious about rendering tallow from beef fat so when we got our pork fat for rendering this year we also purchased 30 lbs of beef fat from a local producer of grass fed beef. Hickory Nut Gap Farm was luckily having a sale on beef fat so it was the kick I needed to give this a try.

Main Reason For Attempting This: Tallow Makes Good Fry Oil

With so many gastro pubs and fancy eateries grasping for something good and different there has been an increasing demand for unique twists on old favorites. I wanted to see what all the fuss was about tallow and the flavor it offers.

Fan – If you don’t have a vent hood you should set up a fan for ventilation

Cut up tallow into cubes for faster rendering. A food processor can be used to shred it further if you want to render really fast. I just cut it into chunks using a knife with a towel wrapped around the handle to prevent slippage from it being too greasy. It is not as melty and greasy to cut up as pork fat.

Fat cut into strips and chunks and just starting to render.

Faster Rendering Time Than Pork Fat

The Crock Pot was turned to high for a few hours and then I turned it down to low. I was very surprised how fast the fat started rendering off beef.

It is simply amazing how much faster tallow renders when compared to pork fat. I would say that it takes half the amount of time to render.

A Note On The Smell

Before I rendered this fat I read that beef fat smells bad when rendering. I hoped that it wouldn’t be a smelly as some said it would be. As I suspected, it wasn’t that smelly with a vent hood on high and a window open.

There is a chance that if you buy lower quality beef fat that the smell might be worse. Sometimes when beef fat is bought it is just that fat that is around the kidneys. The fat I rendered was better quality than this type of fat.

Grass fed beef generally smells different than conventional feedlot beef so that might also be a factor. Regardless, I still would not recommend rendering if you have folks coming over to visit that day or early the next.

Beef fat starting to sweat and render in the Crock Pot. This is a 7 quart model.Beef cracklings rising to the top of tallow rendered in a Crock Pot. This happened fast. You could easily render a Crock Pot full of tallow after a day at work when using the slow cooker method but you might have to can it up the next day.Tallow rendered on a gas range. I use a round griddle to set my pot on to prevent the heat from getting too hot. My gas range tends to run hot even on low.

It rendered pretty fast but I came to same conclusion with tallow as I did Lard when it comes down to easiest method. The Crock Pot wins hands down for ease of use and how fast it renders. It is also a little safer to do it in a slow cooker.

You get a lot of beef cracklings when rendering tallow. These are sometimes called greaves.

Some people really like beef cracklings for cooking but after tasting them I am not a big fan. They have a very strong beefy taste that is just not for me. If you render tallow you should at least try one to see if you like them. There are a lot of Turkish recipes that use them so maybe I am missing something.

I plan on freezing mine in small bags and using them for quality dog treats. Our Great Pyrenees approve of the plan! The fat only cost me $1 per lb so these are pretty cheap treats, especially considering they are all meat and from grass fed cattle.

Crock pot rendered tallow.Tallow with some crunchy beef bits settled to the bottom.

Most of the bits have been spooned out but with tallow the bits don’t rise to the top entirely so you get a lot of small bits that could probably be filtered out more easily if you poured this through cheese cloth or a wire mesh. I didn’t filter. I just carefully scooped the clear tallow off the top. If I did it again I would filter at least the last 20% of the tallow.

My little kitchen has been in cooking oil canning mode for a few days now. You don’t have to have a big kitchen to do a lot of canning. I think mine measures 10’ x 8’ but the layout makes it easy to get to everything.

Clean & Sterilize Jars

When it comes to jar size that is up to you. I use quarts most of the time for rendered oils but in this case I used some pints. I suggest scaling your jar sizes based on your family size or how much you plan on being able to use within a week with refrigeration after opening.

If you are using new jars then I would still give them a quick wash an rinse because they can have a smell and residue from the factory. Stick the jars in a 250 degree oven for 10 minutes or so to sterilize.

I have never had a problem with a jar not being clean enough using this method. Use a jar lifter like the type that come in any canning kit to lift hot jars out and place on a towel or other heat proof surface when ready to fill with tallow.

Fill jars with hot tallow using a ladle. Take your time with this. Hot oil is nothing to play around with. It doesn’t take too long to fill jars safely.

Put On Lids & Rings

Make sure rims of jars are free of grease or residue after filling with tallow. You can use a paper towel with some vinegar on it if clean up is needed. Put on lids and tighten rings down. Use a towel or mitts to help with this because jars are going to be hot.

Hot tallow just put in jars. It almost looks like honey. I was surprised how pretty the color turned out to be.Cooled beef tallow. It is more yellow in color than any lard you will see.

Tallow Vs. Lard

Considering that beef fat is usually the same cost as pork fat per lb but yields less oil, I prefer lard for putting back. At the same time tallow can be excellent for deep frying, making candles, and for soap. Lard was used for soap a lot years ago.

For general cooking I prefer lard but French Fries made from tallow are a delicacy everyone should try. Frying breaded chicken at the same time as the Fries and maybe a few veggies sides is a meal to remember.

Cheap Calories

Beef fat calories are definitely like lard in that they are some of the cheapest calories out there. While you can’t live on fat alone, it is important in a survival situation to get enough of it to stay healthy.

Adding a spoonful of tallow to your dinner during hard times can stretch out your other rations and make your meal more filling and satisfying. The high levels of Omega 3 fatty acids in grassfed beef fat are good for your health. Sure there are fats like olive oils and others that may have some major benefits too but imported oils are not going to be as readily available in a true SHTF scenario.

Rendering your own fats gives you some high quality oils an fats at a fraction of the cost. You are not going to find a quart of olive oil or similar for $3 a quart. Sometimes very cheap soy bean oil or canola oil can be had for that price but that is about all you are going to find.

Beef fat or tallow has 4,072 calories per lb. Assuming I yielded about 22 lbs of tallow (with the rest becoming cracklings or being lost due to evaporation)

22 lbs x 4,072= 89,584 calories

89,584/1800 calories per day=49.76 or about 50 days worth of calories for an adult

$32.00 for 30 lbs of Beef Fat provides 50 days worth of calories for $0.64 per day. This number would have been closer to $1 per day if I had not caught a major sale.

Yield Is Lacking Compared To Pork Fat

When I rendered pork fat into lard I got 14 quarts from 30 lbs of fat. Rendering beef fat only yielded 10 quarts from 30 lbs but I got as many or more cracklings off the 30 lbs of beef fat as I did 60 lbs of pork.

Beef fat simply has more meat solids mixed into the fat. If you like the cracklings you get from beef then it may be worth it to you for a reduced oil yield.

Shelf Life

Tallow is capable of a very long shelf life. In fact this is one major thing it has going for it. Even if tallow is opened and left without refrigeration it can take a long time to turn rancid. This is one reason it was so popular over the years for use in soap and candle making.

Even if it was just rendered and stored, it could be made into a lot of useful things later on. People did not waste anything they did not have to back in the day before $1 bars of soap or cheap electric lights.

Have you ever made soap or candles with tallow? How about cooking and recipes? I have some tallow to use up now and would love to hear what recipes you like the most.

Author Bio

Samantha Biggers lives on a mountain in North Carolina with her husband and pack of loyal hounds in a house her husband and she built themselves. When not writing she is working in their vineyard, raising Shetland sheep, or helping her husband with whatever the farm and vineyard can throw at them.

i remember my Mother making tallow but when you said it was for frying I was surprised. My Mom said it was for making hands soft. She put it in small bowls with lids. It was very hard when it was cold and you just wiped your fingers over the hard stuff and rubbed it on your hands. I remember my Mom’s hands were very soft all the time even just before she died.

Tallow has so many uses and I am still discovering them! I want to try out using it for boot grease, Thanks for reading and sharing! I have to say that after rendering it and cleaning up I did notice softer hands!

I raised hogs for many years, so I have rendered many pounds of pork fat. I have always wondered about the beef fat because I never took the opportunity to render it when we harvested steer. Thanks for the article! Next time, I WILL do it!

Thanks for reading! Just remember that tallow rendering is a bit smellier than pork which is why I suggest a fan! Using beef fat from cattle that have mostly been on pasture helps too. I know I can tell a big different in the smell of pork fat that is from a penned versus pastured pig.

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MEET GAYE

I'm Gaye, just an ordinary gal trying to make sense of our changing world. I am addicted to prepping, DIY projects, adult coloring books, and ballroom dancing. I live what I call a strategic life and believe you should too. Everyone needs to prepare for the worst and live for the best. Won't you join me?